Konrad Peutinger (1465-1547) obtained the Tabula Peutingeriana in 1507, which today is kept at the Austrian National Library in Vienna. This map is a 13th-century copy of 4th or 5th-century original, which in turn may have been based on a 1st-century map of the road system in the Roman Empire. This 17th-century printed version includes explanatory notes by Marcus Welser, a relative of Peutinger’s wife. The facsimile extends over several pages, stretching from the westernmost parts of the Roman Empire to South Asia.

Italia Benedictina, delineata APRCPW, excusa per haeredes Homannianos, Norimbergae, [undated, but probably 18th century].​This map shows Benedictine houses (both men’s and women’s) in Italy and nearby countries. That this was printed by Homann’s heirs (he died in 1724) means that this must be dated after his death. In the lower corner it depicts Saint Benedict instructing Saint Maur to take the Benedictine mission north to France (Gallia) and Saint Placid to take it south to Sicily.